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Thread: Mix and match?

  1. #1

    Mix and match?

    Can fish be mixed? If in the summer I go with tilapia can I start to introduce trout as it gets cooler and visa versa? I know tilapia are ciclids and aggressive so I wonder if they'd kill small trout. Or maybe tillapia and bass together? Anyone tried?

  2. #2
    Oops I fell off!
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    1,737

    Re: Mix and match?

    Hi PlantWoman,
    Generally, it does not work too well mixing fish species. As a general rule, fish eat fish, that's what they do.
    It is best to keep them apart. Some folk keep two species in the one tank by the use of partitions or cages.

  3. #3
    Management Team
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Bundamba, Queensland
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    6,398

    Re: Mix and match?

    Hi,

    Aside from the fact that fish eat fish, there's the issue of water temperature. Trout and tilapia are at different ends of the temperature spectrum. Trout would be dying in water that was comfortable for Tilapia (and vice versa).

    GaryD
    "All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident." - Arthur Schopenhauer

    www.microponics.net.au - for candid dialogue on integrated backyard food production.
    www.urbanaquaponics.com.au - the home of the Online Urban Aquaponics Manual.

  4. #4

    Re: Mix and match?

    Sounds like a perfect reason to add a second system to your backyard
    Martin
    (Think, grow rich and share the love!)

  5. #5
    Management Team
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Bundamba, Queensland
    Posts
    6,398

    Re: Mix and match?

    Hi,

    I agree, Martin. When one's mind travels to different fish species, it's clearly time for another system.....or at least for new elements in one's existing system.

    All of the systems that I have seen (or heard of) focus on a single fish tank connected to one or more growing systems.

    There's nothing to suggest that we can't have more than one fish tank hooked into a system. When it comes to small-scale aquaponics, having different species in different (but connected) tanks.....all in a shared water cycle.....is probably our best shot at a productive backyard polyculture.

    That way, aquatic organisms like freshwater fish and crayfish get what they need out of the polyculture without having each other over for dinner (in the literal sense).

    GaryD
    "All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident." - Arthur Schopenhauer

    www.microponics.net.au - for candid dialogue on integrated backyard food production.
    www.urbanaquaponics.com.au - the home of the Online Urban Aquaponics Manual.

  6. #6

    Re: Mix and match?

    Garry can i answer the mix and match and plumbing thread here i have 2 ibc/s in the ground [can be used together or seperate ] running a main line to[in order] the bypass to the fish tanks
    Strawberry tower
    4 grow beds
    aqua lemon tree
    glasshouse where it will if needed run 4 beds and capillary bed
    The glass has the capacity to run separate with its own sump[one tap only to turn off] all the water from the system then returns [gravity ]to the fish tanks or a clean water sump then via a small pond pump[or the main pump]to a nft and yabby and duckweed tank then back to the main fish tank
    I have just ordered more ibc/s [2 more in system so 4 kinds of fish if needed]
    This whole thing can run on 1 pump and gravity return the system has taps on every thing[20 total] so you can turn of and on at will [at he moment the nft and duckweed are off]
    If its free pick it up

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